sqlite man page on Mandriva

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SQLITE(1)							     SQLITE(1)

NAME
       sqlite - A command line interface for SQLite

SYNOPSIS
       sqlite [options] filename [SQL]

   SUMMARY
       sqlite  is a terminal-based front-end to the SQLite library. It enables
       you to type in queries interactively, issue them to SQLite and see  the
       results.	 Alternatively,	 you can specify SQL code on the command-line.
       In addition it provides a number of meta-commands.

DESCRIPTION
       This manual page documents briefly the  sqlite  command.	  This	manual
       page  was  written  for	the  Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the
       original program does not have a manual page.

   GETTING STARTED
       To start the sqlite program, just type "sqlite" followed	 by  the  name
       the  file that holds the SQLite database. If the file does not exist, a
       new one is created automatically. The sqlite program will  then	prompt
       you  to	enter SQL. Type in SQL statements (terminated by a semicolon),
       press "Enter" and the SQL will be executed.

       For example, to create a new SQLite database named "ex1" with a	single
       table named "tbl1", you might do this:

       $ sqlite ex1
       SQLite version 2.0.0
       Enter ".help" for instructions
       sqlite> create table tbl1(one varchar(10), two smallint);
       sqlite> insert into tbl1 values('hello!',10);
       sqlite> insert into tbl1 values('goodbye', 20);
       sqlite> select * from tbl1;
       hello!|10
       goodbye|20
       sqlite>

   SQLITE META-COMMANDS
       Most  of	 the time, sqlite just reads lines of input and passes them on
       to the SQLite library for execution. But if an input line begins with a
       dot  ("."), then that line is intercepted and interpreted by the sqlite
       program itself. These "dot commands" are typically used to  change  the
       output  format  of  queries,  or	 to  execute certain prepackaged query
       statements.

       For a listing of the available dot commands, you can enter  ".help"  at
       any time. For example:

       sqlite> .help
       .dump ?TABLE? ...      Dump the database in an text format
       .echo ON|OFF	      Turn command echo on or off
       .exit		      Exit this program
       .explain ON|OFF	      Turn output mode suitable for EXPLAIN on or off.
			      "off" will revert to the output mode that was
			      previously in effect
       .header(s) ON|OFF      Turn display of headers on or off
       .help		      Show this message
       .indices TABLE	      Show names of all indices on TABLE
       .mode MODE	      Set mode to one of "line(s)", "column(s)",
			      "insert", "list", or "html"
       .mode insert TABLE     Generate SQL insert statements for TABLE
       .nullvalue STRING      Print STRING instead of nothing for NULL data
       .output FILENAME	      Send output to FILENAME
       .output stdout	      Send output to the screen
       .prompt MAIN CONTINUE  Replace the standard prompts
			      "sqlite > " and "	  ...> "
			      with the strings MAIN and CONTINUE
			      CONTINUE is optional.
       .quit		      Exit this program
       .read FILENAME	      Execute SQL in FILENAME
       .reindex ?TABLE?	      Rebuild indices
       .schema ?TABLE?	      Show the CREATE statements
       .separator STRING      Change separator string for "list" mode
       .show		      Show the current values for the following:
			      .echo
			      .explain
			      .mode
			      .nullvalue
			      .output
			      .separator
			      .width
       .tables ?PATTERN?      List names of tables matching a pattern
       .timeout MS	      Try opening locked tables for MS milliseconds
       .width NUM NUM ...     Set column widths for "column" mode
       sqlite>

OPTIONS
       The program has the following options:

       -init file
	      Read  in and process 'file', which contains "dot commands".  You
	      can use this file to initialize display settings.

       -html  Set output mode to HTML.

       -list  Set output mode to 'list'.

       -line  Set output mode to 'line'.

       -column
	      Set output mode to 'column'.

       -separator separator
	      Specify which output field separator for	'list'	mode  to  use.
	      Default is '|'.

       -nullvalue string
	      When  a  null  is	 encountered,  print  'string'.	 Default is no
	      string.

       -[no]header
	      Turn headers on or off. Default is off.

       -echo  Print commands before execution.

OUTPUT MODE
       The SQLite program has different output modes, which define the way the
       output (from queries) is formatted.

       In  'list'  mode,  which is the default, one record per line is output,
       each field separated by the separator  specified	 with  the  -separator
       option or .separator command.

       In 'line' mode, each column is output on its own line, records are sep‐
       arated by blank lines.

       In HTML mode, an XHTML table is generated.

       In 'column' mode, one record per line  is  output,  aligned  neatly  in
       colums.

INIT FILE
       sqlite  can  be initialized using resource files. These can be combined
       with command line arguments to set up sqlite exactly the way  you  want
       it.  Initialization proceeds as follows:

       o The defaults of

       mode	       = LIST
       separator       = "|"
       main prompt     = "sqlite> "
       continue prompt = "   ...> "

       are established.

       o  If a file .sqliterc can be found in the user's home directory, it is
       read and processed. It should only contain "dot commands".  If the file
       is  not found or cannot be read, processing continues without notifica‐
       tion.

       o If a file is specified on the command line with the -init option,  it
       is processed in the same manner as .sqliterc

       o All other command line options are processed

       o The database is opened and you are now ready to begin.

SEE ALSO
       http://www.hwaci.com/sw/sqlite/
       The sqlite-doc package

AUTHOR
       This   manual   page   was   originally	written	 by  Andreas  Rottmann
       <rotty@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by
       others).

			   Mon Apr 15 23:49:17 2002		     SQLITE(1)
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